Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Shark Bite!

Rate this book
Kids will love pulling the tabs to make Mark the shark take big bites and laugh out loud in this interactive book! Collect the whole Crunchy series with titles like Monster Munch and Crocodile Snap!

Mark the shark is the scariest animal in the ocean—or so everyone thinks. Kids will love this interactive board book with sliders that allows them to make the shark’s mouth take a big bite . . . or let out a big laugh!

12 pages, Board Book

First published June 2, 2015

57 people want to read

About the author

Little Bee Books

182 books6 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
44 (30%)
4 stars
37 (25%)
3 stars
48 (33%)
2 stars
14 (9%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 20 of 20 reviews
Profile Image for karen.
4,012 reviews172k followers
July 11, 2024
SHARK WEEK BOARD BOOK!!



the purpose of shark week—or the purpose of shark week before discovery's recent trend of airing programs where ‘celebrities encounter sharks’ instead of ‘scientists talk about sharks’—was to teach people that sharks weren’t these villainous deepwater monsters hunting and eating all the humans, and that we should respect, rather than fear them;* a little shark and awe, if you will.



this board book has the same purpose, but since it’s geared for the under-three crowd, it’s even more oversimplified than “anthony anderson is now ok with sharks existing.”



or is it?

obviously it’s not *really* about sharks; it’s about EVERYONE GETTING ALONG and DON’T BE AFRAID OF PHYSICAL DIFFERENCES and DEAR GOD HOW DID THIS BOOK GET SO STICKY?

but like the ocean itself, there's subtext and then, miles down, there's even weirder-looking subtext.



will i spoil this 4-page book? i WILL. three-year-olds shouldn’t be on goodreads reading book reviews anyway. ya NERDZ!

this book is about mark the shark. his life is very lonely, for all the other creatures are afraid of him because he has sharp, scary teeth. like so:



one day, proving the theory that “everything is a jerk” and fear is just violence waiting to happen, a crab pinches mark’s tail:



setting off a disproportionately aggressive reaction:

“I’m going to bite all of you!…Come out, come out, wherever you are!…If you won’t be my friends, then you’ll be my dinner!”

into this somewhat awkwardly worded diatribe floats an octopus who is maybe on ecstasy, and she tries to soothe mark’s tantrum by stroking him with her many tentacles but OH NO MARK IS TICKLISH and he laughs and laughs.



which puts everyone at ease suspiciously quickly—maybe screen the whole ocean for e—but in any case: happy ending yay.

The other fish heard Mark laughing. What’s going on? they wondered. They came out of their hiding places and saw that Mark wasn’t so scary after all.

Now Mark the shark has many, many friends.




and now everyone is happy.

but maybe we should re-evaluate, look closer, 'cuz some sharks are terrible.



ACTUAL LESSON LEARNED: laughter is the best medicine camouflage.

because let’s face it, it is statistically very likely that mark is going to eat a bunch of these new "friends"—apex predators gonna apex predate. and, given the design of this book, it becomes chillingly clear that he has been winnowing them down this whole time. fish-memory and board-book-underestimation being what they are, it's assumed none of y'all will notice.

but start noticing.

this is a pull-the-tab kinda book, where each page works the drawbridge of mark’s mouth like so:



cronch.

through the wonders of design-economy, one tab controls and reveals two pages worth of different situations occurring in mark’s tummy; one foreshadowing a creature on the next page, and one flashing-back to a creature on the previous, just-turned page.

which really complicates the narrative: characters presumed unharmed are now seen in mark's tummy, while characters we have yet to meet are right there in mark's gullet, and then i guess escaped on the next page? are these mark’s fantasies? or is this, in fact, what has been going on quietly while we have been reading about and sympathizing with poor lonesome mark? this layer of doubt and unreliability is as difficult to unsee as that hand pushing down on the dino-butt of my second favorite apex predator:



because this, you will remember:



is the crab who pinched mark's tail on the previous page, and it kinda looks like revenge, served tepid.



but the pinch occurred while mark appears to be eating some next-page rando-crab, who's just chilling when we turn the page.



and if rando-crab in mark's tummy while jerk-crab is pinching, and later seen outside of mark, it makes the pinch more of a rescue mission than the bullying the text would have you believe.



even more problematic is here, where, with her clearly distressed face peering up out from mark’s digestive tract:



is the hippie octopus who was only trying to help:



who is now being slowly consumed while everyone cheers, put at ease by a predator's laughter.



this is subliminally teaching your toddlers that it’s okay to eat people who have wronged you—or even people who have helped you—as long as you hide your monstrous appetite under the mask of smiles and laughter.



sleep with one eye open.

still unconvinced? check out this last-page happily-ever-after scene:



you will note that the those two pufferfish; smirky and bystander



are nowhere to be found... which is probably okay, i mean, really—if frat guys were fishes, amiright?



the ocean is probably better off without 'em.

but honestly, i just don't know what to think anymore. this book has thrown off my whole moral compass as well as my sense of whether sharks are "just animals doing their thing" or are deeply manipulative sleeper agents working at the discovery channel and this is why we need more maritime lawyers.



AND THAT IS MY REVIEW OF A BOARD BOOK FOR BABIES!!!!

* the purpose of syfy’s version of shark week is the exact opposite: sharks are going to eat you. wherever you are, regardless of biologic.




come to my blog!
84 reviews
September 6, 2023
I'll be honest I bought this book without even looking inside simply because I knew my toddler would get a huge kick out of sticking her fingers in the shark's mouth and me pretending to chomp them. The author and publisher knew that and ruthlessly targeted me because they clearly could not have cared less about any sort of actual story. Zero literary effort and yet I'm still stuck out here reading this dumb book to my baby because she is incredibly cute when we read it together and every time we do I think how maybe Mark the shark shouldn't have any friends after all if he goes around threatening to eat them when he's mad. That's not something you just shrug off? Sigh.
Profile Image for E.H. Drake.
Author 8 books23 followers
December 2, 2024
This is a cute story, and it's very engaging, but I have a major bone to pick with it. In the middle of the story, there is a crab that pinches the main characters tail to be mean and is named a brave crab. That's not brave, that's mean. I understand this is children's fiction. I just think it's important we pay attention to what we're reading our kids. But don't take this as any indication. I took the book off the shelf.
Profile Image for Annie.
516 reviews38 followers
July 10, 2020
It's a sturdy board book with a fun shark bite cardboard to chomp your child's fingers.
But there's a reason small fish aren't friends with Mark the shark. As soon as this book is over, you just know it's Mark's lunch time.
Experience of this book is incomplete if you're not struggling with a two year old over which page to be on. He can point out the "Oc'opus!"
Profile Image for Stephanie.
153 reviews
March 8, 2019
My daughter is obsessed with "Baby Shark". We didn't want to just get her a book with the song lyrics and so we got this one.

It's cute and she adores it! She loves making up voices for the animals on the page (saying things like "Noooo, Don't eat me!" "Ahhhhh")
Profile Image for Marti (Letstalkaboutbooksbaybee).
1,757 reviews152 followers
December 30, 2018
I LOVE this book for the pull tabs that make the shark chomp his teeth. But the actual story is a little lacking and all the sea creatures seem a little too mean for my liking.
Profile Image for Cherish Brown.
1,295 reviews10 followers
January 22, 2021
(5☆ Would recommend & would read again)
My son loves this book. It is such a great book for adding movement and tactile learning into books.
Profile Image for Serena.
4 reviews
January 25, 2022
The story was alright but the interactive options were fantastic!
Profile Image for Shannon Fay.
371 reviews20 followers
February 23, 2016
Cute book with cool illustrations. A cute story about a shark (and who doesn't think sharks are super cool).

And the best part, the moveable teeth in the book. I got this book for my friend's son (almost 2), and he is in LOVE with this book, just obsessed with it, because of those moveable teeth.
Profile Image for The Book Box.
1,479 reviews5 followers
Read
November 1, 2022
Mama gave me almost all of these "chomp" books for Christmas, since I loved Dino Chomp so much. We read them all right after I opened them.

Re-read this whole set of books the other night!

Mama read this to toddlers over Zoom and I "helped"!

Re-read October 2022: Home sick so I read this to myself.
Profile Image for Laura McLoughlin.
881 reviews11 followers
June 22, 2016
Perfectly fine story about a shark who just wants to make friends. Kids will have fun making the shark mouth move.
Displaying 1 - 20 of 20 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.